reasonable ruling?
#21
Posted 2010-November-11, 04:17
#22
Posted 2010-November-11, 04:59
Quote
At this point I would like to add that S actual hand was: ♠AQXXXX ♥JXX ♦KXX ♣X
Clearly, 5♠ doesn't make any sense - he knows N must hold 4 KC unless he super-accepted with 1 KC and 19 HCP.
So finding equally ridiculous hands that will bid RKCB and would make 6♠ a lousy proposition opposite North's actual hand is quite an easy exercise.
#23
Posted 2010-November-11, 05:37
arikp111, on 2010-November-11, 04:59, said:
Clearly, 5♠ doesn't make any sense - he knows N must hold 4 KC unless he super-accepted with 1 KC and 19 HCP.
So finding equally ridiculous hands that will bid RKCB and would make 6♠ a lousy proposition opposite North's actual hand is quite an easy exercise.
5♠ makes perfect sense if he also knows North will bid on because he has four. Grand could still be on if North has something useful to say at this point.
#24
Posted 2010-November-11, 05:39
I don't know of any hand that will ask for key cards and even though missing only 1 key card will not considering bidding the slam.
So 5S gave by itself the message I considered slam, and the hesitation didn't therefore give any additional information. There is no link between the 6S logical alternative and the hesitation.
#25
Posted 2010-November-11, 06:45
bluejak, on 2010-November-10, 07:20, said:
We seem to have two threads on the same hand!
Funny I was looking the net for you're old forum to ask the same question, only now I saw you're here
#26
Posted 2010-November-11, 08:26
campboy, on 2010-November-11, 05:37, said:
Exactly, there is a case for saying 5♠ is a stronger bid than 6♠ here, I would certainly treat it as forcing with 4 key cards. If I'm looking at the Q♠ in the small hand, I have 3 ways to ask for extras now. I can ask for the Q♠ then bid something over 5♠(I'll get a shock when partner claims to have it as in this case), I can bid a new suit directly, or I can bid 5♠ and see what partner bids when he bids on.
I would be very shocked if the director was called as I'd assume anybody at any level knew you bid on automatically with 4 keys here.
I was expecting the hand to be something more like Axxxxx, xx, x, Kxxx where there is room for partner to only have one key card, and you have a decision to make how to ask for the Q♣ or Ax if you have all the key cards.
On the actual hand he probably chose 5♠ because he was hoping partner would show some interest in the grand so he could show his K♦. Kxxx, AK, AQJx, Axx is what you want, and if partner bids 6♦ over 5♠ you get to the grand.
I notice you've ducked the question about finding a hand that will use blackwood opposite the actual strong hand, sign off and the slam will not be at least on a finesse, this is key, because if there isn't one, I'd suggest that there is no useful UI given.
#27
Posted 2010-November-11, 08:40
jeremy69, on 2010-November-10, 08:23, said:
Bbradley62, on 2010-November-11, 02:24, said:
pran, on 2010-November-11, 02:53, said:
- There is an agreed hesitation.
- A peer-poll establishes that pass and 6♠ are logical alternatives.
- The hesitation suggests bidding on.
- The player chooses the suggested 6♠ alternative.
- Pass (the other alternative) would be less successful
- It is not spiteful to call a director when you think a player may have broken the law.
#28
Posted 2010-November-11, 09:09
#29
Posted 2010-November-11, 09:45
nige1, on 2010-November-11, 08:40, said:
This is not true, I would even claim that the hesitation suggested passing.
If partner bids 5S fast it would be obvious he play simply that when showing 1/4 as a rule you don't assume 4 and therefore partner always continue with 4. The hesitation might mean that partner set down and seriously calculated the slam odds vs the know 4 key cards and decided against bidding the slam.
#30
Posted 2010-November-11, 09:49
Cyberyeti, on 2010-November-11, 08:26, said:
I would be very shocked if the director was called as I'd assume anybody at any level knew you bid on automatically with 4 keys here.
I was expecting the hand to be something more like Axxxxx, xx, x, Kxxx where there is room for partner to only have one key card, and you have a decision to make how to ask for the Q♣ or Ax if you have all the key cards.
On the actual hand he probably chose 5♠ because he was hoping partner would show some interest in the grand so he could show his K♦. Kxxx, AK, AQJx, Axx is what you want, and if partner bids 6♦ over 5♠ you get to the grand.
I notice you've ducked the question about finding a hand that will use blackwood opposite the actual strong hand, sign off and the slam will not be at least on a finesse, this is key, because if there isn't one, I'd suggest that there is no useful UI given.
I've not answered your question because I find it to be irrelevant.
S wasn't looking for grand, he wasn't sure 6 is on.
when the TD asked N why he bid slam he answered along the lines "look at my hand, how good it is; how can I not bid the slam"
He certainly didn't say "if I got 4 KC I must bid on and 6S is my weakest bid."
#31
Posted 2010-November-11, 09:52
Partner transfered to ♠ and I have 5 card there, so we have a 10+ card fit there.
Obviously opps have to have at least a 9+ card fit. If this 9+ card fit is in a minor, partner will only hold 1- cards there.
Even a ♥ single is not unlikely.
This possible single, if South actually holds one, could make investigating the grand difficult. North could have wasted values in that suit.
South asked for key cards and got the best answer possible, only to discover that he picked the wrong track to investigate the grand.
5♠ is a cry for help on the way to the grand.
South hesitation clearly suggests bidding 7♠, 6♠ is the normal and ethical bid, pass is no LA.
#32
Posted 2010-November-11, 10:01
Zelandakh, on 2010-November-11, 09:09, said:
From Responder's hand it is very clear that E-W do not have the agreement that 5S is forcing with 4 key cards.
If the plan was to bid 5S after the 4KC response then the player should have done so, but he did not. He instead hesitated and did so at extreme length in contravention of L73 before calling 5S thereby communicating to his partner other than by call or play.
If it were indeed system then there would only have been good tempo.
Indeed it is entirely possible that responder wants the opener to hold all KC as a condition for his bidding slam as would be the case when the partnership has failed to exchange enough about the source of tricks, and the case in this situation, the ace asker does not have some independent source of tricks.
As for leaving options to discover a grand. What can opener communicate by convention that could provide useful information towards counting to 13? None. So it is pointless to go after useless information.
#33
Posted 2010-November-11, 11:10
arikp111, on 2010-November-11, 09:49, said:
S wasn't looking for grand, he wasn't sure 6 is on.
when the TD asked N why he bid slam he answered along the lines "look at my hand, how good it is; how can I not bid the slam"
He certainly didn't say "if I got 4 KC I must bid on and 6S is my weakest bid."
You just have no comprehension of the point I'm making. If the big hand is so good, as it is in this case that slam cannot be seriously against the odds on any hand partner can possibly have for his blackwood, then I'm perfectly entitled to bid 6. I reckon that is the case, hence asking the question as if there's no counter example, I cannot lose the ruling. Partner can be as bad as Qxxxxx and any 7 other cards including 2 kings which is short of a blackwood ask, and the worst I can be on is a finesse pretty much, and it can be laydown.
Nowhere did it actually say what N said when asked the question, so I had to guess.
With the actual S hand if north bids 6♦ I'm very close to bidding 7♠ as he should have Kxxx, AK(x), AQxx, Ax(x) and if he has the J or 10 of diamonds the grand should be good, and is not misere even if he doesn't.
#34
Posted 2010-November-11, 11:13
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#35
Posted 2010-November-11, 11:57
axman, on 2010-November-11, 10:01, said:
If the plan was to bid 5S after the 4KC response then the player should have done so, but he did not. He instead hesitated and did so at extreme length in contravention of L73 before calling 5S thereby communicating to his partner other than by call or play.
If it were indeed system then there would only have been good tempo.
Indeed it is entirely possible that responder wants the opener to hold all KC as a condition for his bidding slam as would be the case when the partnership has failed to exchange enough about the source of tricks, and the case in this situation, the ace asker does not have some independent source of tricks.
As for leaving options to discover a grand. What can opener communicate by convention that could provide useful information towards counting to 13? None. So it is pointless to go after useless information.
To answer the last question first, they might have the (sensible) agreement that opener, holding 4 key cards, can bid a suit in which he has a source of tricks but will just bid 6♠ otherwise. This would find the grand opposite Kxxx, AKQx, Axx, Ax or similar. As to the tempo, well it is quite reasonable to think about whether there is some continuation opener can make (6♥, here) which will allow you to bid the grand; if there isn't you just want to bid 6♠ and avoid giving information away.
FWIW here is what North said according to the other thread on this hand.
Quote
#36
Posted 2010-November-11, 12:12
WGF_Flame, on 2010-November-11, 05:39, said:
I don't know of any hand that will ask for key cards and even though missing only 1 key card will not considering bidding the slam.
So 5S gave by itself the message I considered slam, and the hesitation didn't therefore give any additional information. There is no link between the 6S logical alternative and the hesitation.
When players were polled some of them passed 5♠ so pass is an LA.
Thus such players find it credible that 5♠ is a signoff.
Some people posting in this thread believe 5♠ can be passed with four key cards.
Thus such people find it credible that 5♠ is a signoff.
When players make a slow signoff after Blackwood there is a lot of experience, frankly a vast amount, that the most likely reason is that they are not off two key cards and have not decided whether to bid slam, thus suggesting that going on to slam with a suitable hand may be successful.
That means that a slow signoff provides UI to partner suggesting going on over passing with a suitable hand.
Thus it is clear that if pass is an LA that we should rule this one back. Of course, some people do not think pass an LA, and if it is not, that's fine.
campboy, on 2010-November-11, 04:17, said:
I think it is clear that 5♠ can be a signoff. As to your second point .......
Cyberyeti, on 2010-November-11, 08:26, said:
I would be very shocked if the director was called as I'd assume anybody at any level knew you bid on automatically with 4 keys here.
Shocked, huh? Since we have some posters and some pollees who pass 5♠ I see no reason for shock. You may play 5♠ as forcing opposite 4 keys, but clearly not everyone does so a TD call is perfectly reasonable.
It is always my view that sensible discussion on these threads is not helped by assuming the OP has got it wrong. If 5♠ was forcing by agreement opposite 4 keys then I am quite certain the players would have said so at the time [very loudly ] and the OP would have put it in. So we can safely assume that it is not forcing opposite 4 keys for the actual pair involved.
Merseyside England UK
EBL TD
Currently at home
Visiting IBLF from time to time
<webjak666@gmail.com>
#37
Posted 2010-November-11, 12:18
arikp111, on 2010-November-11, 00:44, said:
(snip)...For sake of argument, let's assume that N (the 2NT opener) is allowed to bid slam based on the quality of his hand. (snip)
Please...
Self-serving
Winner - BBO Challenge bracket #6 - February, 2017.
#38
Posted 2010-November-11, 12:40
bluejak, on 2010-November-11, 12:12, said:
Thus such players find it credible that 5♠ is a signoff.
Some people posting in this thread believe 5♠ can be passed with four key cards.
Thus such people find it credible that 5♠ is a signoff.
When players make a slow signoff after Blackwood there is a lot of experience, frankly a vast amount, that the most likely reason is that they are not off two key cards and have not decided whether to bid slam, thus suggesting that going on to slam with a suitable hand may be successful.
That means that a slow signoff provides UI to partner suggesting going on over passing with a suitable hand.
Thus it is clear that if pass is an LA that we should rule this one back. Of course, some people do not think pass an LA, and if it is not, that's fine.
I think it is clear that 5♠ can be a signoff. As to your second point .......
Shocked, huh? Since we have some posters and some pollees who pass 5♠ I see no reason for shock. You may play 5♠ as forcing opposite 4 keys, but clearly not everyone does so a TD call is perfectly reasonable.
It is always my view that sensible discussion on these threads is not helped by assuming the OP has got it wrong. If 5♠ was forcing by agreement opposite 4 keys then I am quite certain the players would have said so at the time [very loudly ] and the OP would have put it in. So we can safely assume that it is not forcing opposite 4 keys for the actual pair involved.
The OP didn't say anything of what was said between director and N in his original post, so I was left guessing. I assumed in the hurry to get away, that N had simply left it in the hands of the director.
I thought 5♠ was forcing to anybody with 4 key cards and was surprised to find some people are saying it isn't to them, hence the absence of this in the OP didn't alert me that anything was wrong. To me that is just bridge, but clearly not to some others. I thought you just made a try in a suit if you had a hand that wasn't prepared to bid 6 opposite any 4 key cards.
#39
Posted 2010-November-11, 13:41
However, if NS deem that "5♠ is forcing by inference" or "by bridge-knowledge common to players at this exalted level" then that is a less convincing argument, especially in the light of the director's poll.
#40
Posted 2010-November-11, 15:18
bluejak, on 2010-November-11, 12:12, said:
Thus such players find it credible that 5♠ is a signoff.
Some people posting in this thread believe 5♠ can be passed with four key cards.
Thus such people find it credible that 5♠ is a signoff.
When players make a slow signoff after Blackwood there is a lot of experience, frankly a vast amount, that the most likely reason is that they are not off two key cards and have not decided whether to bid slam, thus suggesting that going on to slam with a suitable hand may be successful.
That means that a slow signoff provides UI to partner suggesting going on over passing with a suitable hand.
Thus it is clear that if pass is an LA that we should rule this one back. Of course, some people do not think pass an LA, and if it is not, that's fine.
I didn't claim that pass isn't LA, i claimed that the hesitation didn't give any additional information to the 5S bid without the hesitation.
the hesitation information was "I had to check wather we had slam, it wasn't a clear to me without thinking about it that we can only make 5. bidding 5S in tempo when we have 4 of the 5 key card gives exactly the same message. if you think not, show me a hand that can ask for keycard and then will not consider slam. the only extra information the hesitation gives is that the player was not thinking fast, might be tired, and didn't think of the bid before the 4NT, but this isn't relevent information.